[Vision2020] Idaho "implied consent" theory and practice
Ron Force
rforce2003 at yahoo.com
Tue Nov 11 09:56:56 PST 2008
If you refuse to submit to the test, here's what happens:
"If you are pulled over for a suspected DUI, you must submit to a
blood, breath or urine test as per the Idaho Implied Consent Law,
18-8002A. The statute reads as follows:
“If you refuse to submit to or if you fail to complete and pass
evidentiary testing for alcohol or other intoxicating substances:
* The peace officer will seize your driver's license and issue a
notice of suspension and a temporary driving permit to you, but no
peace officer will issue you a temporary driving permit if your
driver's license or permit has already been and is suspended or
revoked. No peace officer shall issue a temporary driving permit to a
driver of a commercial vehicle who refuses to submit to or fails to
complete and pass an evidentiary test.
* If you refused or failed to complete evidentiary testing and do not
request a hearing before the court or do not prevail at the hearing,
your driver's license will be suspended. The suspension will be for one
year if this is your first refusal. The suspension will be for two (2)
years if this is your second refusal within ten (10) years. You will
not be able to obtain a temporary restricted license during that
period."Source: Idahodrivinguniversity.com
Ron Force
Moscow, Idaho USA
________________________________
From: Kenneth Marcy <kmmos1 at verizon.net>
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Sent: Monday, November 10, 2008 1:21:58 PM
Subject: [Vision2020] Idaho "implied consent" theory and practice
On Monday 10 November 2008 11:41:01 Dan Carscallen wrote:
> Sunil says:
>
> "Like other states, Idaho has 'Implied consent.' That means if you
> drive on our roads, it's implied that you have already consented to
> providing a breath, alcohol, or urine sample if you are arrested for
> DUI.
Does this mean that a driver can refuse a test if he or she is not under
arrest? Must the officer arrest the person first? And under what charge may
the officer arrest, if he or she has no evidence yet from a test result?
> Someone in Southern Idaho got picked up, and taken to the hospital after
> refusing to provide a blood sample. Officer gets a nurse to get a
> sample, while guy is lying handcuffed on a gurney. (Our courts have
> said it's okay to get this sample by force, if the driver won't
> willingly provide it.)
Does implied consent apply to nurses? If an officer asks for assistance from a
nurse, must the nurse comply? Has not the nurse some professional prerogative
to exercise some independent judgment? Since when do law enforcement officers
order medical professionals to do this, that, or the other thing?
What, exactly, precisely, does 'get this sample by force' mean? Do officers
believe they have the authority to extract a test sample from an individual
by force? Considering the variety of characteristics of human bodies, sober
or otherwise, might not empowering an officer with this level of authority
place that officer in professional, legal, and moral positions untenable?
> Officer asks for a urine sample, which the driver refuses to provide.
> Officer then orders the nurse to catheterize the driver for a sample,
> which is done."
How many hospitals, and their insurance companies, have been sued as a result
of the driver's expectation that his or her person will not be violated
against his or her will by medical professionals, regardless of what a law
enforcement officer requests?
> Now, I don't know about the case you speak of in South Idaho, but I do
> know that up here the nurses won't go to that extent. First off, there
> is a modicum of privacy when you are in a hospital (I'm sure HIPAA has
> something to do with it), and secondly, none of them want to testify in
> court. As EMS personnel, we also have that same confidentiality (HIPAA
> again) when it comes to patients.
How many EMS personnel want to pay for professional liability insurance and
additional legal fees to maintain specialized attorneys on retainer to assist
them in case of unforeseen circumstances related to private work?
And how is an Idaho driver to know whether an EMS person is working for the
hospital or working privately for his or her own account? And if the answer
is not what the injured would prefer, what is he or she to do? Re-call 911?
It seems to me there are more than enough conflicts of interest here to fill
one e-mail message quite full.
> Perhaps the example Sunil speaks of doesn't necessarily deal with the
> nurses at the ER, but more with someone the State Police brings in from
> outside. I know there have been rumblings about ISP contracting with
> local EMS professionals (as individuals, not with their departments) to
> do blood draws to get blood alcohol levels. Again, I don't think there
> has been much success up here because people don't want to be called
> into court.
That's probably not the first half of the story, much less the rest of it.
Ken
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